

given The Movie: Hiiragi Mix
映画 ギヴン 柊mix
Hiiragi Kashima and Shizusumi "Shizu" Yagi's band "syh" is set to debut, but they run into trouble when their support guitarist leaves. Although Hiiragi often clashes with Ritsuka Uenoyama—the smug boyfriend of his childhood friend Mafuyu Satou—Hiiragi convinces him to perform as their temporary member. Despite their friction, Hiiragi acknowledges Uenoyama's talent and respects his hard work—to the point of asking him to complete an old song that Mafuyu's ex-boyfriend, Yuki Yoshida, left behind. In between writing, recording, and filming a music video, Hiiragi comes to terms with his love for the aloof Shizu and wrestles with how to convey his feelings. Meanwhile, "given"—composed of Uenoyama, Mafuyu, and their bandmates Haruki Nakayama and Akihiko Kaji—receives an offer to debut as well. The members are ready and beyond excited, save for Mafuyu, who has never before thought about playing music professionally. As Uenoyama attempts to understand Yuki and replicate his unique sound, Mafuyu steps back to ponder over the looming changes in his life, fearing what the uncertain future may bring. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Hiiragi Kashima and Shizusumi "Shizu" Yagi's band "syh" is set to debut, but they run into trouble when their support guitarist leaves. Although Hiiragi often clashes with Ritsuka Uenoyama—the smug boyfriend of his childhood friend Mafuyu Satou—Hiiragi convinces him to perform as their temporary member. Despite their friction, Hiiragi acknowledges Uenoyama's talent and respects his hard work—to the point of asking him to complete an old song that Mafuyu's ex-boyfriend, Yuki Yoshida, left behind. In between writing, recording, and filming a music video, Hiiragi comes to terms with his love for the aloof Shizu and wrestles with how to convey his feelings. Meanwhile, "given"—composed of Uenoyama, Mafuyu, and their bandmates Haruki Nakayama and Akihiko Kaji—receives an offer to debut as well. The members are ready and beyond excited, save for Mafuyu, who has never before thought about playing music professionally. As Uenoyama attempts to understand Yuki and replicate his unique sound, Mafuyu steps back to ponder over the looming changes in his life, fearing what the uncertain future may bring. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
kozad
May 21, 2025
TL;DR - yes, if you like Given, these movies are worth seeing. These movies do however fall into the BL trope of "Oh, look, these two men are friends, let's make them horny friends instead!" which is kinda tiresome TBH. This movie ends in such a way that I am assuming the third movie is really a "part 2" for this movie - I plan to watch it. Oh, BL tropes, you're here again. All the guys are pairing up and have been secretly in love with eachother their entire lives. 🥰 Actually, that's probably the most annoying thing about these movies. It was cute whenit was just Mafuyu and Uenoyama in love during the TV series - Given felt unique and like it was doing its best to break stereotypes in the genre. Then again, so did the first few episodes of Twilight out of Focus - you felt like, "Holy crap, anime is doing something realistic for the gays!" but then it falls back into "safe" territory. Of course, these Given movies are much better than something like Gravitation, please don't get it twisted. We still see real emotions from the characters in Given, not just, "uwu, I'm straight but this guy is so girly and now I'm popping wood, hehe" In this movie we get a couple of coming out scenes, and one of them is realistic enough that the boy coming out is actually greeted with a negative reaction, which is sadly the world we live in, but it's smoothed over within 10 minutes so not of any real concequence. But still, it was nice to see some of the rejection we encounter IRL in the anme for cishet fan girls to mull on. There's also sex scenes, though they aren't showing anything of course because this is anime and not that stuff you need a VPN to see in Texas. The sexual tension and scenes in the movie are cute but perhaps a little over done - like, bro, have none of these anime men heard of lubercation? 🤔 At keast that was my thought during the sex scene we get near the end of the movie. "You will cry" and I was like, "Excuse me? Ma'am, this is *not* a Wendy's!" So yeah, stereotypes are broken, if carefully. This movie is mostly centered on Hiiragi and Shizusumi, with Uenoyama probably receiveing the bulk of the screen timne when we aren't folliwing these two around. Hiiragi and Shizusumi are in a 3-piece band, with Uenoyama filling in on guitar as a temp. Mafuyu is in the movie several times, but he honestly didn't do much aside from fret and stay in his own inner thoughts. In fact, I'd say that Mafuyu in this movie is right back where we found him in the first episode. He kinda reminded me of Tsukasa from .hack//sign - quite, unable/unwilling to express themselves adequately enough for those around them to be aware of Mafuyu's past, thoughts, feelings, desires, etc. Essentially, Mafuyu seems to be on the spectrum, no hate intended. Uenoyama is Uenoyama - just doing his own thing, but also sparing thoughts for Mafuyu and even bringing him up in conversations, but weirdly never seeming to go out of his way to actually spend time with him... Which was weird to say the least. They are supposed to be love in, so get over there and get it! Hiiragi and Shizusumi have their own stuff going on, but out of the two, it's clear that the writers spent the least amount of time on Shizusumi - they found the "dark and quiet" stereotype somewhere and ran with it. He does open up a bit in the later half of the movie, but overall he felt flat and one demensional with just one motivation behind everything he does. It felt like a waste tbh.
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